Wasn't the container the issue, not the water?Also kind of silly to wait all day for the bathhouse to close, when she could have just gone down to the river yet once again.
I reckon throwing the purifying stone and Aogiri grass into the river then shouting create only to watch a few hundred high potions sink to the riverbed might have been a problemI've heard about all sorts of bathtub brews at house parties, but think this is the first time I've seen such a thing being done at a public bathhouse...
Also kind of silly to wait all day for the bathhouse to close, when she could have just gone down to the river yet once again.
@inkindougWasn't the container the issue, not the water?
From what I can remember, whilst she was at the river she was making them individually. Whereas on this occasion, the volume of materials provided coupled with the "non consumable" purifying stone means logistically using a larger-than-bucket but smaller-than-river receptacle for h2o would be the sensible way to go about it.@inkindoug
Except she never needed a container before. She spent two chapters sitting by the riverside making potions before, so why would she need more then a washbasin full of river water? I mean sure she saves brewing time throwing it all in bathhouse tub at once, but she spent hours waiting for the bathhouse to close.
This just comes off as a hamfisted restriction so that she would be forced to spend the day wondering around town. which could have been just as easily accomplished after a morning down by the river making potions.
O . oFrom what I can remember, whilst she was at the river she was making them individually. Whereas on this occasion, the volume of materials provided coupled with the "non consumable" purifying stone means logistically using a larger-than-bucket but smaller-than-river receptacle for h2o would be the sensible way to go about it.
I think her words were "Whilst I was making them I was keeping count, there are definitely over 100" (Okay, not think, I TL'd it so went back and checked) and she didn't just scream create and then pack up with over 100 potions. It wasn't explained whether they were made individually, but if she can make that many in the bath, but not in one go whilst by the river, the conclusion I draw from that is...O . o
iirc her second trip to the river saw her producing several hundred low potions. So even if she was doing it individually, it wouldn't have taken nearly as long to make the elf a few dozen High Potions. This was less a matter of logistics and seems more about not repeating the same action for a third time.
She never needed a container before because the 'regular potion' recipe called for plain water. The river was an ideal place to get effectively-limitless quantities of water.@inkindoug
Except she never needed a container before. She spent two chapters sitting by the riverside making potions before, so why would she need more then a washbasin full of river water? I mean sure she saves brewing time throwing it all in bathhouse tub at once, but she spent hours waiting for the bathhouse to close.
This just comes off as a hamfisted restriction so that she would be forced to spend the day wondering around town. which could have been just as easily accomplished after a morning down by the river making potions.
Chapter 3, page 16She never needed a container before because the 'regular potion' recipe called for plain water. The river was an ideal place to get effectively-limitless quantities of water.
Because the 'High Potion' required purified water, she needed a contained place where she could just toss the Purifying Stone into the water and let it do its thing.
She couldn't do that at the river, because the moment she tossed the stone in, it'd purify some amount of river water, that water would immediately be carried downstream, and she'd lose the Stone.
The bathhouse-as-receptacle was to keep the purified water in-place so she could use it once the Stone had worked its magic.
Plus, maybe I just missed it being stated, but there's no indication that the Purifying Stone isn't one-use.
So doing it bucket-by-bucket at the river isn't guaranteed to work if the Stone only works once upon being placed in a body of water--doing it in a large container like a giant public bathhouse tub, means you get the greatest amount of purified water at one time as possible.
Chapter 3, page 16
"" Purifying stone: Also known as “Goddess Tears”, purifies tainted water. Oh, no matter how many times it’s used, it never runs out.
ST "That explains why they’re 1000 Tamils… But… still expensive"
Yeah, I never mentioned the need for a different kind of water as I thought that was assumed.
The elf is kinda annoying. Knife ears I swear.
No Dragon Waifu to heal and tame.![]()
Hence the use of a washbasin i mention in my last few responses. Think of it like a wooden bucket the size of those yellow lidded, black plastic storage bins from Costco and big box stores.She never needed a container before because the 'regular potion' recipe called for plain water. The river was an ideal place to get effectively-limitless quantities of water.
Because the 'High Potion' required purified water, she needed a contained place where she could just toss the Purifying Stone into the water and let it do its thing.
She couldn't do that at the river, because the moment she tossed the stone in, it'd purify some amount of river water, that water would immediately be carried downstream, and she'd lose the Stone.
The bathhouse-as-receptacle was to keep the purified water in-place so she could use it once the Stone had worked its magic.
Yupper as inkindoug already pointed out, the stone doesn't have a listed limit on its use. As for the bathhouse tubs, sure they are convenient in that they have a larger capacity and are magically filled, a good sized washbasin would work just as well, even if she had to manually fill it.Plus, maybe I just missed it being stated, but there's no indication that the Purifying Stone isn't one-use.
So doing it bucket-by-bucket at the river isn't guaranteed to work if the Stone only works once upon being placed in a body of water--doing it in a large container like a giant public bathhouse tub, means you get the greatest amount of purified water at one time as possible.
for real. good thing this isn't romance (?)The elf is kinda annoying.